The Ultimate Canon Camera For Bird Photography - Canon EOS 80D Digital SLR Camera

The Ultimate Canon Camera For Bird Photography - Canon EOS 80D Digital SLR Camera

 

Bird Photography Tips

Action shots of small birds are difficult to pull off well, partly because they're so incredibly fast. Success usually requires appropriate photo gear, planning ahead, experience, luck, and lots of practice.
Bird photography, especially wild bird photography can be quite challenging. Birds of prey are some of the most exciting wildlife subjects you'll ever photograph, but their fast movements and the bright sky behind them pose big obstacles for photographers.
Bird photography tips for perfect bird portraits:
1) First things first - Your camera, is your bestfriend!
So, what DSLR is good for fast-action photography? I would recommend a fast camera that can handle at least 1/2000 of a second shutter speed with 6 to 9 fps (frames per second), if you want to get the best results, plus a good autofocus system for quick focus acquisition. But if you already have an entry-level DSLR, it doesn't mean that you cannot capture birds - it just means that you might miss a good shot, just because your camera is not fast enough. The most important thing to keep in mind - the speed of focus acquisition both on camera and on lenses is far more important than DSLR's frames per second.
2) Finding the Subject - Locating birds
Now that you have your equipment set up, you need to find birds to photograph. I recommend starting with the most common birds such as finches, sparrows and robins that are used to people and do not mind cooperating with and posing for photographers. Try to develop some skills and techniques by photographing them sitting on benches, eating, sleeping and flying. The best time for photography? Early morning is typically the best for bird photography, because birds actively look for food for themselves and their youngsters. So try to go out and shoot some local birds and see what you can do. Great Shot!
3) Approaching birds - Don't scare them away!
What do you do if the bird you are trying to approach gets scared and flies away? There are many different techniques to approach wild birds and I will go through what works for me. Pretty much all birds have superb vision, so it is very likely that the bird will see you first. Also, all birds have their own "comfort zones" and if you try to get any closer, they feel threatened and fly away.
So, here is my technique to approach shy birds:
- Do NOT wear clothes with bright colors and try to blend in with the environment as much as possible
- Do NOT make sudden moves. If you need to raise your camera and take a picture, do it very slowly. In short be Quiet!
- Do NOT stare at the bird while approaching it. Animals in general perceive direct eye contact as a threat and they will flee at their first opportunity
- Try not to walk if the bird is looking at you. The best time to approach is when the bird is looking away or is busy doing something.
4) Post-processing and cropping
Cropping is a big part of bird photography. Unlike people, birds do not sit and pose in front of the camera, so filling the frame with the bird is not always possible. If you photograph a bird from a distance and try to resize the image to a smaller resolution for the web, the bird will look too tiny.
Lightroom is a great and easy tool to organize your images and catalog your bird collection, while Photoshop is great for fixing images that cannot be fixed within Lightroom. I probably spend 90-95% of my time in Lightroom and about 5-10% in Photoshop. I shoot everything in RAW (and I recommend you do, too), so I can achieve much better results while manipulating images in Lightroom or Photoshop, since I have a wide spectrum of colors that I can work with and maximum image quality.
Most importantly, photographing your favorite bird should be a fun experience. Take your time and remember the key to a great photo is always patience. Until next time, happy birding!
Article Source: https://EzineArticles.com/expert/Kamran_Awan/2274413

Are You Getting the Most Out of Your Photography?

 Rochester NY Late 70s By Daniel Wagner

 I was thinking about my older 35mm film camera that I used and how well those photographs came out. It was a Petri 35mm Slr Camera. I had quite a bit of fun with black and white film back then. I came across the article below and thought I would share it. 


Digital Photography & 'Special Effects' Yet Some Prefer to Use Film

Expert Author John Cohen
I recently talked to a young man who I discovered was very interested in photography (he did not know anything about my own 'Special Effect' photography), and having told me that it was his main hobby, I was intrigued, and very surprised, when he explained that he far preferred to use film rather than digital imaging. Even though it is so difficult and expensive to buy film these days. I wrongly presumed he was referring to Black and White photography, but soon realized he was buying color films.
All new cameras, even mobile phones, are digital. Also, there are only a few small laboratories that will process color film, and home processing although possible, is not easy. Yet he told me there are groups of photographers, like him, preferring to use film and their numbers are growing.
I have looked on the Internet and there are indeed lots of discussions on the advantages, or disadvantages, of using film in comparison with digital.
The majority claim that in using film, because of the need to be far more selective (taking far less photographs due to the high costs), has trained them to become far better photographers.
Another claim was that good digital cameras are expensive and need to be replaced every four, or five years, as they are upgraded so frequently. Yet buying a second-hand film camera will be cheaper, last a lifetime and will hold its value, even though film cameras are far bulkier and heavier.
Lastly, old transparencies and negatives can, and will always be, easily viewed, but who knows, as digital technology changes so quickly, if it will be possible to view digital images in the future.
I was amazed to learn this, because of the incredible possibilities of digital photography, that now exist. The cameras not only make it easier to control the image and exposure, in so many ways, that were much more complicated before with film. There is the advantage of seeing the digital result immediately. But even after having taken the picture, with the aid of software, the options available now to manipulate digital photographs are just fantastic!
This made me reflect on why I had favored using color reversal film (for my own creative transparencies) rather than negative film in the 1960's, before anyone had computers. I enjoyed most viewing the large projected image, far more than a print, even though there was no option to alter the picture once taken, yet I was using it for my own 'special effects'. But having to wait at least a week, to see the transparencies, was frustrating.
I preferred transparencies to negatives because I found it extremely hard to master color printing, as an amateur, so I always relied on professional processing laboratories to make my prints.
My 'Special Effects' pictures were imaginative (nothing like the usual photographs) and I soon found that it was nearly impossible, when they made prints from my negatives, for them to know how to get the color balance that I really wanted. The advantage of transparencies was that I could simply instruct them to match the color balance of the transparency that they could see.
My favorite film was the Kodak 'Kodachrome 25' that sadly is no longer available. Transparencies were so much more vibrant than any of the prints and so I concentrated on what I could do with Kodachrome. By always using this film I soon got to know, how best to control it, even with my own 'Special Effects' these days I am excited by the digital option, rather than film. However, using my own invented 'Painting with light' technique that involves photographing projected images, I can create some effects that would be exceedingly difficult to achieve with digital software.
My own views have always been that the most important aspect of photography is the resulting picture, the composition, the quality and the choice of subject. Not the questions of the technique, or make of camera, lens used, or film etc. It is only the resulting picture that really matters; however, it was created!
After so many years using film, I am now personally totally sold on the digital system, but should any readers be interested in what special effects I achieved with my own 'Painting with Light' technique, please do have a look at my website https://www.jncohen.net/Limited-Edition-Prints/Painting-with-light.htm
"... regarded as one of Britain's most original photographers." The Times
"To Cohen, the impossible in color merely takes a little longer... " Photography Year Book
The limited editions of his 'Special Effect' photographs can all be seen at https://www.artist-john-cohen.net/index.htm
John Neville Cohen has other specialized interests too, please have a look at https://www.jncohen.net/homepage.htm
Article Source: https://EzineArticles.com/expert/John_Cohen/27816